编织诞生:相互依存与真菌转化。

IF 2.4 Q2 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Frontiers in global women's health Pub Date : 2025-09-10 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fgwh.2025.1642537
Michelle Sadler, Sara Cohen Shabot
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在这篇文章中,我们通过“真菌转向”的镜头来看待分娩,使用真菌菌丝网络作为概念和隐喻资源,重新思考分娩作为集体护理的关系经验。就像真菌一样,它们通过互惠互利的多物种关系茁壮成长,生育也在生物、社会和生态联系的密集网络中展开;孕妇和胎儿、照料者、社区和环境之间的关系。我们利用自己对比鲜明的分娩经历——一个是由产科暴力和高度警惕控制的需要塑造的,另一个是由信任、安全和屈服的能力塑造的——来说明不同的护理模式是如何强化自主、孤立和有限的分娩主体的逻辑,或者相反,突出它们的脆弱性、相互关联性和渗透性。我们的分析结合了描述性现象学方法,以其感官,体现的即时性来传达出生的生活经验,以及解释学现象学方法,将这些经验置于更广泛的文化和关系框架中并加以解释。现象学对肉体间性的见解挑战了自主主体的观念,将主体性重新定义为通过与他人和世界的内在具体化和相互联系的接触而出现的主体性。在这个框架中,真菌的隐喻阐明了相互依存的编织如何动摇了主体和个性化的主导现代概念,为想象什么是积极的出生提供了新的途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Weaving birth: interdependence and the fungal turn.

In this article, we approach childbirth through the lens of the "fungal turn," using fungal mycelial networks as a conceptual and metaphorical resource for rethinking birth as a relational experience of collective care. Like fungi, which thrive through mutualistic, multispecies relationships, childbirth unfolds within dense networks of biological, social, and ecological connections; between pregnant person and fetus, caregivers, communities, and environments. We draw on our own contrasting childbirth experiences -one shaped by obstetric violence and the need for hyper-vigilant control, the other by trust, safety, and the capacity to surrender- to illustrate how different models of care either reinforce the logic of autonomous, isolated, and bounded birthing subjects or, in contrast, highlight their vulnerability, interconnectedness, and permeability. Our analysis combines a descriptive phenomenological approach, to convey the lived experience of birth in its sensory, embodied immediacy, with a hermeneutical phenomenological approach, which situates and interprets these experiences within the broader cultural and relational frameworks that shape them. Phenomenological insights on intercorporeality challenge the idea of the autonomous subject, reframing subjectivity as emerging through inherently embodied and interconnected engagements with others and the world. In this framework, the fungal metaphor illuminates how the weaving of interdependence unsettles dominant modern conceptions of agency and individuation, offering new ways to imagine what constitutes a positive birth.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
13 weeks
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